Journal Metrics

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP): 0.704ℹSource Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP):2014: 0.704SNIP measures contextual citation impact by weighting citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field.

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 0.498ℹ

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR):2014: 0.498SJR is a prestige metric based on the idea that not all citations are the same. SJR uses a similar algorithm as the Google page rank; it provides a quantitative and a qualitative measure of the journal’s impact.

This paper presents an outcome of a British Geological Survey digital mapping programme of the geology of the British Isles. This programme had created a methodology that provides a quantitative description...

Moderate and high radon potential in Northern Ireland is associated mainly with (i) the Neoproterozoic psammites, semipelites, meta-limestones, volcanics and mafic intrusives of Counties Londonderry...

The conditions for sediment accumulation in the intermittent lakes of subsidence dolines were modelled in laboratory. For a given water table sinking rate we investigated the grain size and settling...

During the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic, diverse terrestrial vertebrates were preserved in fissures formed in Carboniferous Limestone on an island archipelago spanning from the south of Wales to...

A substantial part of an exceptionally large pliosaur skeleton was uncovered in Upper Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay at Stretham in 1952. Relatively few bones were collected without delay by palaeontologists...

A new specimen comprising a fragmentary pterosaur rostrum can be referred to the ornithocheirid genus Coloborhynchus sp. on account of its anteriorly directed anterior-most teeth located on an upturned...

The geomorphology of the upper reaches of the Yellow River of China is composed by a sequence of fluvial terraces that were formed following phases of neotectonic uplift and subsequent river downward...

In addition to being an international financial center, Hong Kong has rich geodiversity, in terms of a representative and comprehensive system of coastal landscapes, with scientific value in the study...

It has long been known that chloride-dominated saline ground waters occur at depth in the UK, not only beneath the sea but also onshore at depths of a few hundred metres. In a few places in northern...

Suitable onshore analogues for offshore wind-farm turbine foundations in the Chalk of the North Sea would be invaluable. Such foundations require examples of near surface weathering illustrating both...

The infraorder Elateriformia is crucial for understanding of basal beetles evolution from extraordinarily diverse Polyphaga suborder. However early stages of Elateriformia evolutionary history are far...

Integrated in the national inventory of geological heritage in Portugal, the “Iberian Massif Landscape and Fluvial Network” was selected as one of the geological frameworks with international relevance....

Crinoids are common fossils, yet complete specimens are rare. Diverse plates from the crinoid endoskeleton may be preserved, but the columnals from the stem are the most common. Even if not distinct...

Archaeological and geological information may coincide in the same objects (sites, collection specimens, etc.). Understanding this is important in making correct judgments about geological heritage,...

The geological character of the South Atlantic islands was only slowly established during the first half of the 20th century. That same period was marked by a generally dismissive view of continental...

Until recently exhumation of much of the southern British Isles, outside of the area of well-documented Neogene folding in south-eastern parts of England has been ascribed to large-scale early Palaeogene...

This paper presents an outcome of a British Geological Survey digital mapping programme of the geology of the British Isles. This programme had created a methodology that provides a quantitative description...

Jurassic aquifers constitute an important reservoir in the eastern High Atlas of Morocco. The primordial source of potable water in the Figuig Oasis is located in the Lias aquifer. Currently, the hydrodynamic...

The period between the middle of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century saw the birth and consolidation of prehistory and archaeology as scientific disciplines. Discussions...

The Rhaetic Transgression, 210Myr ago, which marked the end of continental conditions in the European Triassic, and the arrival of marine deposition, may have been heralded by the arrival of burrowing...

The ice flow path and dynamic behaviour of the British-Irish Ice Sheet has been subject to renewed interest and controversy in recent years. Early studies in eastern England argued for interaction with...

A fragment of a maxilla and isolated theropod teeth from the (?) Middle Jurassic Tiourarén Formation are described. The specimens come from Tadibene, in the rural community of Aderbissinat, Thirozerine...

The higher parts of the cores of the Swanworth Boreholes, Dorset, allow detailed investigation of parts of the Upper Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay Formation that are difficult to sample on the coastal type-section....

A small polished slab of ‘Marston Marble’, Lower Jurassic, from Marston Magna, Somerset, UK, contains several ammonite specimens with pieces of shell missing from the body chamber immediately in front...

This paper presents δ18O and δ13C values from three early Holocene lacustrine carbonate sequences from Palaeolake Flixton in northeastern England. The δ13C values are typical of carbonates precipitating...